“Sorry , we could not find a driver matching with your operating system. Please contact us for further support”

It’s because there is no driver matching with your operating system. Now, there are some device only working in some specific operating system only. The manufacturers don’t make the driver for every operating system. For example, With the popular of windows 64 bit, they only have driver for 64 bits version only. If you install a 32 bit in this situation, you will not be able to use that device because there is no driver. In some other cases, for old equipments, the manufacturer only make the driver for 32bit version, they don’t continue to support 64bit version.

So if you are really need to use that device, the only thing you can do is to install the correct operating system.

Again, DriverIdentifier don’t write driver, we just collect drivers around the world and brought them to you.

No, we don’t. We just collect drivers from the hardware company and manufacturers.

Hardware company will provide the drivers to the manufacturers. After sometimes when the normal support for that hardware has ended, the hardware company will stop providing driver update for that hardware. Some manufacturers still maintain the driver update for their hardware. For example, I had an old Pentium D computer with an Intel brand motherboard that I installed 7 on (several years ago). Intel did not make a driver available for the MEI for that chipset for Windows 7 officially. However, I did find another manufacturer did (I think it was Gateway computers). I was able to use that driver.

In this case, if you’re finding XP drivers for your stuff that your manufacturer doesn’t have available for download, the drivers are probably from another manufacturer.

As one hardware can be distributed by manufacturers, they might be compatible with each other. DriverIdentifier analyze the drivers it collect from the manufacturer websites, then it will compare your driver with its database. If DriverIdentifier see a compatible, it will show you the link to download.

That makes DriverIdentifier a big difference with other Driver Update software. We do not alter the drivers, we show you the option to download the right drivers from the manufacturer.

I just want to thank you. I have a HP x2 Transformer. I upgraded on Windows 10 and found my Device Manager yelling around with yellow exclamation marks. I contacted HP support for the missing drivers and got the answer “please roll back to Winwos 8, we don’t support Windows 10 on that device” (the notebook is 16 months old). So I tried around and found an article about your page. I used it to find out some missing drivers. But then 3 different drivers you found did not work. I was sad but tried further and further. Then I found out the right one and with one driver all 5 different missing devices were found (not unimportant – the missing devices were the Intel Thermal Frameworks!). So in the end, I can bother HP with the info, that your page safed my notebook meanwhile theirs technicians were not able to google the correct drivers 🙂

We recently received some comments saying that why our program is not updated for almost a year. We are actually updating our database everyday, some of you might notice that there are some drivers you can’t not find today, but after several days you will see it in our database. Our team is working very hard to add drivers to our database. We are now a few sites having the very large driver database.

We have received a number of requests asking whether you can search the driver by using hardware id. We have passed this to our development team, now they have released a new feature allowing you searching the specific drivers by using hardware id.

Due to the size of driver database, we now open this feature to premium users only.

To use it, you need to login to your account page and click on “Searching Drivers”